Scott Snyder adds a real-life kind of horror to the supernatural, continuing to evolve the story in "Wytches" #3, while Jock and Matt Hollingsworth make add a sort of surreal haziness to the mood that makes the whole thing even scarier.

After a bullying episode ends tragically, the Rooks family moves to a new town to leave those terrible memories behind -- only to encounter something far more sinister in Scott Snyder and Jock's "Wytches" #1.

Fans of "Dial H" might come running to "Justice League" #23.3, but China Mieville and a different artist for each page end up presenting a comic that is only slightly amusing, but never gains traction.

Building on an intriguing idea by co-writer Scott Snyder, Marguerite Bennett effectively fleshes it out in the brighter-than-usual "Batman Annual" #2, but gets hampered by shallow and inconsistent characterization.

"Snapshot" #3 is the pay-dirt issue that gives readers answers for all the mysteries of the previous issues of Andy Diggle and Jock's techno-thriller, making some sense of the dazzling but bewildering events of previous issues.

"Batman" #14 has Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo continue "Death of the Family" with a dip into the chemicals that created the Joker and other past encounters, but the Joker is changing the rules this time.

After discovering a killer whale in a bank
lobby, and a body in that whale, Dick sets out
to discover the truth behind the murder, a
truth that may dredge up old wounds around
the death of his parents.